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SUCCESS-DWA: A Highly Scalable and Cost-Effective Optical Access Network. Speaker : Tse-Hsien Lin Teacher : Ho-Ting Wu Date : 93.10.21. Outline. Overview SUCCESS-DWA PON Architecture S tanford U niversity A ccess – D ynamic W avelength A llocation The Upstream Scenario Performance
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SUCCESS-DWA: A Highly Scalable and Cost-Effective Optical Access Network Speaker:Tse-Hsien Lin Teacher:Ho-Ting Wu Date:93.10.21
Outline • Overview • SUCCESS-DWA PON Architecture • Stanford University Access – Dynamic Wavelength Allocation • The Upstream Scenario • Performance • Wavelength Plan • Conclusions
Overview • Passive Optical Network (PON) • The Time-Division Multiplexed (TDM) PON • The Wavelength-Division Multiplexed (WDM) PON • Arrayed Waveguide Grating (AWG)
Passive Optical Network • In a PON, all components between the end users and the central office (CO) are passive
The TDM PON • In a TDM PON, end users share the bandwidth in time domain • In the CO, an optical line terminal (OLT) transmits the downstream traffic to the end users and manages the upstream traffic flows from the end users
The TDM PON • Downstream • The traffic is broadcast in nature • Each Optical network unit (ONU) receives a copy of the downstream data, extracts only the traffic targeting itself • Upstream • Traffic from the ONUs to the OLT is centrally scheduled by the OLT
The WDM PON • What’s is WDM • At the same time, The fiber can carry Independent data streams on different wavelengths • WDM PONs create point-to-point links between the CO and end user, no sharing is needed
The WDM PON • A straightforward approach for increasing capacity is to assign different wavelengths to each user for down/upstream transmissions • When a user is idle, the corresponding transceiver in the CO is also idle and cannot be used to support other users • Disadvantage • High Cost • Waste Bandwidth
Arrayed Waveguide Grating • The AWG is a wavelength-routing device • Every second wavelength is routed to the same output port • This period of the wavelength response is called free spectral range (FSR)
SUCCESS-DWA PON Architecture • TL = Tunable laser CH X = Thin-film WDM filter
Downstream • Two TLs must not access the same ONU simultaneously • The AWG does allow all TLs to simultaneously transmit on the same wavelength • All TLs share the load, shifting bandwidth back and forth across the separate physical PONs -- DWA
The Upstream Scenario • Each user is equipped with a fixed-wavelength transmitter that corresponds to the upstream group
The Upstream Scenario • Additionally, upstream and downstream AWGs pass completely different wavelengths and require different channel spacings • Only one Photodetector (PD) and its corresponding receiver module are activated in the initial deployment
Performance • We compare the performance of a four-TL SUCCESS-DWA PON to four TDM PONs • Both TDM and SUCCESS-DWA PONs are subject to the exact same traffic patterns in any given simulation run • The traffic model is the α-stable self-similar traffic model
Wavelength Plan • A trade-off lies between number of the AWG channels and maximum modulation bandwidth
Conclusions • SUCCESS-DWA can viewed as a scalable network taking advantage of both TDM and WDM • The scheduling algorithm in the OLT is responsible for managing the traffic flow for fair access of end users
Reference • Yu-Li Hsueh, Matthew S. Rogge, Wei-Tao Shaw, and Leonid G. Kazovsky, “SUCCESS-DWA: A Highly Scalable and Cost-Effective Optical Access Network”, IEEE Optical Communication August 2004 • Glen Kramer and Gerry Pesavento, “Ethernet Passive Optical Access Network (EPON): Building a Next-Generation Optical Access Network”, IEEE Communications Magazine February 2002 • http://www.eas.asu.edu/trace/optical/applet1.html